The Arizona Cardinals are heading into 2026 with expectations that could hardly be lower, but there are real reasons this team might end up looking a lot better than the outside noise suggests.
A brutal NFC West, a league-worst schedule, rookie head coach Mike LaFleur and no clear quarterback answer have all pushed optimism to the side. Still, the Cardinals did spend the offseason attacking some of the biggest problems on the roster, and that matters.
Quarterback remains the biggest talking point, and it comes with baggage. There’s been plenty of drama around Brissett after offseason contract negotiations put him in a bad light, and his 1-11 record as a starter last season does him no favors.
But the production was there in spots. Brissett posted career highs in passing yards and touchdowns, even if those numbers were helped by early deficits.
He also got two receivers to 1,000 yards, has a relationship with Arizona’s top weapons and understands how to operate an NFL offense. He may not carry the Cardinals to wins every week, but he can protect the ball and keep an offense on schedule.
Arizona also made a point of fixing the offensive line early. The team signed guard Isaac Seumalo in free agency, then used a second-round pick on Chase Bisontis.
Seumalo is set to start at left guard, while Bisontis will battle Isaiah Adams for the right guard job. With Paris Johnson Jr. and Hjalte Froholdt already in place, that gives the Cardinals four solid starters inside, with projected right tackle Elijah Wilkinson left as the main question.
Wilkinson wasn’t a standout in Atlanta last season, but he did grade well in outside zone blocking, which fits what LaFleur is expected to lean on.
That trench work should help the run game too. Arizona struggled to run the ball in 2025 for just about every reason imaginable, so the Cardinals went out and added two premium backs.
Tyler Allgeier arrived in free agency and brings power, short-yardage toughness and strong pass protection. Then came Jeremiyah Love, one of college football’s best players and a potential difference-maker out of the backfield.
He offers a high-end all-around skill set and gives Arizona a new layer at the position.
What LaFleur’s offense will look like remains to be seen, but the expectation is that it will borrow heavily from Sean McVay and Kyle Shanahan. That usually means a run game that sets the table and passing concepts that create easy openings for receivers. It’s the kind of system where players seem to find space constantly, and LaFleur looks like he could be next in line to do that kind of chessboard work.
The weapons are already there. Trey McBride is a proven force at tight end, Michael Wilson has shown he can produce and Marvin Harrison Jr. brings a high ceiling. Put that group into a more functional offensive structure, and Arizona could unlock another level through the air.
There’s also a path for the defense to look much better simply by getting healthy. Cornerback was hit especially hard by injuries last season. Starling Thomas and Sean Murphy-Bunting both went down with season-ending injuries before the year, and Garrett Williams also battled injuries that threw the room off track.
Now there’s a chance for that group to come back together. Will Johnson flashed the first-round talent that made him an easy second-round pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, and Denzel Burke had an underrated rookie season after going in the fifth round. Add in Max Melton, Elijah Jones, Kei'Trel Clark and the rest, and the Cardinals suddenly have a competitive cornerback room with real talent if it can stay healthy.
Nick Rallis is another piece worth watching closely. His young career has already gone through plenty of twists, including a period when he was seen as a future head coach because of his work with an undermanned defense. That momentum faded, Jonathan Gannon was fired and Arizona interviewed multiple defensive coordinators before bringing Rallis back for 2026.
Now the spotlight is squarely on him. The encouraging part is that Rallis has shown an ability to create pressure creatively, something Arizona has badly needed.
He does not have to become Brian Flores or Steve Spagnuolo for this to work. But if the Cardinals can get back to an aggressive defensive mindset, that may be the key to making the whole thing click.
In Other News...
Cardinals Suddenly Face A Tough Call With High Priced Pass Rusher
The Bears spent the offseason patching holes with additions like safety Coby Bryant, linebacker Devin Bush and wide receiver Kalif Raymond, but the pass rush still looks like a spot where help could be needed before the 2026 season. That has put Arizona in the discussion by proxy, since one of the Cardinals pricier edge rushers has surfaced as a possible fit for Chicago in a third-party trade idea.
It is an intriguing sort of speculation for Arizona because it turns a high-priced defensive piece into a potential offseason talking point instead of just a roster staple. The player in question is on a four-year, $76 million deal and just finished a full 17-game season with 30 tackles, 12 sacks and 13 tackles for loss, which is exactly the kind of production that can make outside teams start wondering whether a deal might be possible if the right market develops. [Read more 🡒]
Carson Beck Is Already Facing The Cardinals Question That Matters Most
Carson Beck has spent the early part of his Cardinals stint doing what young quarterbacks are supposed to do: absorbing the offense, leaning on the coaching staff and stacking days of work in a system that can feel like a moving target for any rookie. The third-round pick has been in close contact with Matt Schaub and Nathaniel Hackett while also taking in whatever he can from veteran quarterback Jacoby Brissett, the kind of early classroom time Arizona hopes will speed up his development.
The wrinkle is that the bridge between the rookie and the veteran has not been as full as the Cardinals might like. Beck has said he has not spent much time with Brissett, who skipped voluntary OTAs while pursuing a contract adjustment, leaving Arizona with a familiar camp question for a quarterback room: how much can a young passer pick up when one of the key voices around him is only around part of the time? [Read more 🡒]
Cardinals Fans May Finally See A Real End To The Purgatory
Arizona has spent plenty of time stuck in the same loop, with enough offensive talent and coaching pedigree to hint at progress, only to run into the same old issues when the games start counting. The setup around this group still looks familiar: there is a capable offensive mind in the building, a scheme background tied to the Sean McVay and Kyle Shanahan tree, and at least enough structure on offense to avoid total collapse. Even so, the bigger questions remain the ones that have dogged the franchise for years, especially at quarterback, along the defensive front, and with a schedule that does not appear to offer much relief.
Jacoby Brissett can keep the offense functional and maybe help Arizona steal a few wins, but the larger picture is why some around the team are already looking past 2026. If the season goes the way plenty of skeptics expect, the Cardinals could end up in position to make a major swing in the 2027 offseason, when the draft is expected to offer a chance at a true long-term answer under center. For a fan base that has watched too many false starts, that is the kind of opening that starts to feel less like hope and more like an actual path out. [Read more 🡒]
